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Sandwiches
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by Paul Mones
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“I’m hungry. Can someone please help me? Please. This is serious. I
haven’t eaten since early this morning. Please.” The plea came from a
diminutive man I had just rushed passed on 8th Avenue in New York
City. He was wearing a grey cap pulled down over his forehead and held
a tattered white plastic shopping bag. It was 12:30 a.m. A hard March
wind was blowing through Chelsea and everyone who passed this pleading
man, was hurrying to someplace warm, including me.
I had just eaten at one of my favorite joints Casa Mono. I started with
the pulpo with fennel and grapefruit and followed with the dorada with
artichokes and langostinos (the langoustine tail meat was a bit mushy
but still flavorful.) My belly was full and I still had the glow of a
quarto of solid Spanish red.
For a reason I still do not know, after getting a few steps past this
man, who was all but invisible to passers-by, I stopped and waited for
him to catch up. When I offered a dollar bill to him, he said, “No
man, didn’t you hear, I’m hungry. This is no joke. I don’t want
money. I’m just very hungry.” “Really, no bullshit?” I said.
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by Amy Ephron
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My family likes sandwiches. My present husband had his bachelor party
at Langer’s. The day before our wedding, while I was at a ladies’
lunch thrown by my sisters, my husband, his son, my son, his daughter’s
boyfriend, my brother-in-law, and one of my nephews went to Langer’s
Deli (across the street from MacArthur Park) and ordered pastrami
sandwiches, lots of them, I understand, more than one apiece. And it
was further evidence to me that I was marrying the right person.
In our family, we think of sandwiches as comfort food. The
slightest thing, a bad grade, a lost soccer game, a minor heartbreak
can prompt any one of us to say, “How do you feel about a sandwich?” –
which is code for: Let’s all jump in the car and go to the fish market
in Malibu, Bay Cities in Santa Monica, Bryan’s Pit Barbecue in the
Farmers’ Market...” or any number of other places where they have a
great sandwich.
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by Alan Zweibel
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In 1979 I ate a nectarine that I still think about.
It was August. August 2 to be exact. My girlfriend and I were getting
engaged and a show I’d written material for, “Gilda Live”, was about to
begin its run on Broadway. Life was good. And was made that much
sweeter by a purchase I’d made at a Columbus Avenue grocery on my way
to rehearsal. A nectarine. China’s contribution to the world of fruit.
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by Bruce Cormicle
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I went to the French Laundry restaurant located in the Napa region (specifically, Yountville, California) in 1996 and haven’t been able to get a reservation since – at least until a week ago. Of course, that’s what happens when a chef later becomes tops in the U.S. and his restaurant is voted tops in the world. But with one day’s notice, I was told my group of four were in. Pack your dinner jacket we were told. They should’ve added cash out your 401k and clean out your savings account with a scrub brush. The price to party was now $240 per person for a nine course tasting menu (two options: Chef’s and Vegetarian) not including wine – a decent bottle (not a case) of which will cost you $200 more.
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by Erica W. Jamieson
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My mother stayed with us during her recent visit from back east. She
emerged early each day from the back bedroom in need of coffee. In the
kitchen she would find me up to my elbows in three-grain biscuit dough
or in the midst of mixing a large oven baked pancake, or perhaps
dropping oatmeal scones onto a cookie sheet. I was always in the midst
of something made from scratch, time consuming and terrifically messy.
A
ritual that was met with a quizzical look and her quiet reproach, as if
I couldn’t hear her say, “Nu? Whats wrong with frozen waffles?” My
childhood breakfasts came straight out of a box from the freezer in the
cold mid-western kitchen where I grew up. My mother taught in downtown
Detroit, and early morning school days were mostly about getting up and
getting out. Yet, somewhere in between the up and out part, I remember
a breakfast ritual that my mother and I shared, just her and I, before
she left for work.
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by Laura Johnson
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It's hard to believe that baseball season is about to begin again. I
see bits and pieces on the news about players reporting to Spring
training. I see photos of fathers and sons dressed up in their player's
favorite jersey, watching an early practice, hoping to get an
autograph. The excitement is building of those summer nights at the
ballpark; that all-American warm, fuzzy feeling most folks associate
with baseball.
My thoughts are far from warm and fuzzy, more like torture and terror.
On October 30, 2007 at 2:30 am, my phone rings. I struggle to find the
phone, wondering who died. I hear a voice "Hello, this is Scheduling,
can I speak to Laura." All I can say is "yes?" "Laura, we have a trip
for you. You are going to fly to Denver and then to Boston and back to
Atlanta today." Excuse me, it's 2:30 am, is this a joke? When did we
start flying to these destinations in the middle of the night? I'm not
sure what I said but I get an answer.
"The Boston Red Sox won the World Series a few hours ago and by the
way, you are the Flight Attendant in charge." (I’ve since learned that
no team would jinx their chances of winning by booking the plane home
before they actual clinch the trophy.)
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by Diane Sokolow
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My dad was a two job guy. We lived in a representative, working class
neighborhood in Brooklyn, which was to me, the paradise of the world.
Representative I learned years later meant not just Jewish people, like
us, but an equal mix of almost everything else. The working class is
obvious.
My dad worked at a brokerage house on Wall Street as a runner from 9 to
3. That was his first job. His second job was at the Morgan Annex
branch of the US Post Office, in mid-town Manhattan. He had started at
the PO as a teen-ager, and was in it for the longest possible haul, a
modest pension being the carrot at the end of his rainbow. His hours
on that job were 4 pm to mid-night. He rode the subway to work. He
never owned a car. Once in a long while he got driven home.
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by Amy Sherman
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I don't know if Mae West ever ate a Cobb Salad, but I bet she would
have loved it. After all, she was the one who said "too much of a good
thing is wonderful". A Cobb Salad begins with a bed of Romaine lettuce,
think of it as your basic crunchy blank canvas.
Resting on the greens are strips of toppings – luscious chunks of
avocado, juicy fresh tomato, crumbles of rich blue cheese, hard boiled
eggs and chunks of chicken breast. Frankly I've always found the
chicken to be superfluous, but maybe that's just me.
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by Annie Miler (Clementine)
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The 2008 National Grilled Cheese Month Campaign kicks off at Clementine on Tuesday, April 1st with an exciting and diverse field of grilled cheese candidates. Grilled Cheese Primaries will be held at Clementine during the first 4 weeks of April. Each week, five different sandwiches will campaign on the menu and when you order a sandwich, your vote will determine which sandwiches earn a spot on the ballot for Super Cheeseday(s), April 28-30. Your votes on Super Cheeseday(s) will determine the winner, our
next Commander in Cheese, the Highest Sandwich in the Land.
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by Hanina Stettin
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I can’t help it. I really can’t.
When I go into a grocery store and I put an avocado in my cart,
I think “Ohmigoshwhatif someonecomesoverandwantschips too?” And so I go
and buy chips. Two kinds. Because what if a friend has a craving for
blue corn instead of yellow? G-d forbid I should not have blue corn
tortilla chips in the house. That’s thought one.
Thought two is more like “hmm, never heard of that before.
Maybe it would add a nice kick to stir-fry.” And so I put the odd
looking, non-English labeled jar into the cart, too.
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by Henry Alford
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from the New York Times
I LOVE shopping at my local Gourmet Garage as much as the next guy. But
sometimes I plop a can of chicken broth down on the checkout counter
and think, “$2.19? For someone to boil chicken bones? I want that job.”
So when I heard that the food you can buy at 99-cent stores is more
diverse than you might imagine, I decided to conduct an experiment. I’d
make dinner every night for a week using mostly ingredients bought at
these stores and then, on the eighth night — once I’d gotten my game
down — I’d prepare a meal for friends made only from ingredients bought at 99-cent stores.
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